Volume IV of the survey covers Web and communication technology and has some interesting statistics regarding lawyers’ use of social networking.

Asked whether they personally maintain a presence in an online social network such as Facebook, LinkedIn or Legal OnRamp, 56% of lawyers said yes. Just two years ago, in 2008, only 15% said yes to that question.

The numbers were lower for the question of whether the lawyers’ firms maintained a presence in a social network. Just 17% percent said yes. Still, that was up from 12% last year and 4% in 2008.

At firms of more than 100 attorneys, more than a third of lawyers had no idea whether their firms were involved in social networks.

When broken down by practice area, IP lawyers are most likely to participate in a social network. That makes sense, but you’d probably never guess the next two practice areas on the list: contracts (62%) and commercial law (59%).

For the first time this year, the survey asked lawyers to identify which social networks they participate in. Here’s what they said:

LinkedIn, 83%.

Facebook, 68%.

Plaxo, 18%.

Martindale-Hubbell Connected, 4%.

LawLink and Twitter, both 2%.

Avvo, LegalOnRamp and LegallyMinded, each 1%.

When asked whether they participate in a microblogging service such as Twitter, Jaiku or Tumblr, 5% said yes, up from 1% last year.

[…] In a post here last week, I wrote about findings on social networking from the 2010 Legal Technology Survey Report of the ABA Legal Technology Resource Center. The six-volume survey looks at legal-technology trends in various aspects of law practice. Volume IV of the survey covers Web and communication technology. […]